The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 24, 1929, Page 8

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BOLINDER AND MARY-MAR-ANN . . ‘D here Saturday night, is de- ° X o e | . ' {e attle Bolinder Wins Sweepslakes‘ motor boat. During his last and Mary-Mar-Ann Cap- tures Governor's Cup Two Seattle yachts, colors of the Seattle Yacht the Bolinder, Capt. Richard boese, and Mary-Mar-Ann, Capt Frank J. Seidelhuber, divided the flying the Club, highest honors in the 1929 Capital | to Capital Yacht Race. This was made known with the official an- | nouncements made Saturday eve-| Second honors were won by the Maidie, Capt. Jack Power, being awarded 200 gallons of gasoline and a set of rope fenders. The The Blonde, Capt. Milton B. Henderson, was third, winning 100 gallons of gasoline and 15 gallons of oil. Capt. Walter Draham, owner and skipper of the Kittiwake, won the prize offered for the most effi- cient navigation made on the course. The award was 100 gallons of gasoline donated by the Juneau | Yacht Club. To the Jazz, Capt. Cash Cole, and the Winifred, Capt. Adolph Smith, went two consolation prizes, pic- tures of Auk Lake and Mendenhall Glacier, donated by Butler Mauro Drug Company. Each Given Plaque Each of the vessels entered was presented with an engraved plaque. It was triangular in shape, made of gold plate and bearing the in- seription, “Capital to Capital Yacht Race, June, 1929.” Worked into it were a propeller and totem P DEW The Original Color- less Deodorant | Non-Irritating Harmless to Use 50c Juneau Dru Company H. M. HOLLMANN R. R. HERMANN 8 Fro-| e American | | skippers did not have an opportun- [Hainm Determined To Make Another Attempt for Record ‘ SEATTLE, June 24—Ray- mond Haines, who arrived termined to make another e | attempt from Juneau to Se- in an open outboard was 34 hours, a fraction less than 22 miles an hour. The e motor was damaged consid- e erably by forced beaching. . . e 1,086 miles. His running time . & | . ° . . . . . run he covered 734 out of | . . . . . . . ®eed20000000 000 pole. Each was also given a Ju- neau Yacht Club pennant One prize is yet to be awarded. It is ming by Joseph Patton, Seattle |a special yacht thermos bottle do- judge representing the Power Boat Association. The Bolinder won the sweep- stakes, or over-all prize, known as| the Olympia Jewelers’ Cup, and a Johnson sea horse mo- | tor. The Mary-Mar-Ann was| awarded the Governor's Cup and $100 in Alaska gold by the Juneau | Yacht Club—prizes for the bes performance. Other winners were | Koyoia, Klosh, Maidie, Blonde, Kit- | tiwake, and Jazz. Al of the ves-| sels were presented with an en-| graved plaque by the Olympia| Yacht Club, each bearing the name | of the vessel receiving it. Presentation at Dance The winners were presented their | prizes during an intermission of the Yacht Club’s dance given to the | visitors at Elks Hall. Judge Patton, | who was presented by M. S. Whit- tier of the local Yacht Club, an-| nounced the winners and the pre- sentations were made by B. F. Hume. The Bolinder, which made the race last year, was the big winner. Capt. Froboese, its owner and cap- tain is one of the most enthusiastic of the yachtsmen and his victory was popular. It not only won the sweepstakes for all entries, but carried off first honors for boats 400 gallonsof gasoline donated by | between 25 and 41 feet, receiving the Juneau Yacht Club, and $25 in merchandise from the Pacific Marine Supply Company. It also set the record for the longest non- stop run on the course, its distance being 783 miles. For this it re- ceived a set of imported night plasses donated by the Seattle Yacht Club. Kayoia Is Second The Kayoia, Capt. George Brif- fitt, flying Olympia Yacht Club colors, won sécond in the first divi- sion. It was awarded 200 gallons| of gasoline from the Juneau Yacht Club, and a set of fire fighters. The Klosh, Capt. William G. Reed, placed third in this division. It received 100 gallons of gasoline from the Juneau Yacht Club and 15 gallons of oil. This vessel also won the prize for being the first to cross the finish line. It was awarded a handsome marine paint- ing by Sydney Laurence, donated by the Nugget Shop. Makes Clean Sweep Capt. Seidelhuber, with the Mary-~ Mar-Ann, made a clean sweep in the second division, 41 to 65 feet, as Capt. Froboese did in the small- er size craft. He took first honors, receiving 400 gallons of gasoline from the Juneau Yacht Club, and the Queen City Yacht Club cup. | nated by the Dohrman Hotel Sup- {ply Company, and will be given to the most popular skipper, to be determined by a vote of all the Chaumgc:caplalns entering the race. The lity to hold a meeting and the award will be made later. Special prizes were offered by the Standard Oil Company and the Vacuum Oil Company to vessels using their oils. The Bolinder, sweepstakes winner, using Vacuum 0il, was awarded 30 gallons of Mo- bile oil, and in addition the oil it used on the cruise was donated by the company. The Mary-Mar-Ann won first in| the Standard Oil division, receiv-| ing 30 gallons of zeroline. The | Maidie was second and received 15 gallons of the same oil. Both ves- sels also were furnished with oil for the trip by the company. Yachts Leave Port The visiting yachts left port yes- terday, some on their return jour- ney south and others to cruise in local waters for sometime. All of them made the ‘Taku Glacier cruise, leaving port at 9:30 am. Sunday, escorted by the Chirikof, local official boat. The Klosh, Kayoia, Maidie and Kittiwake had planned to make a cruise up Tracy Arm, escorted by the Jazz. The latter vessel, how- ever, blew a gasket on the trip to Taku and was forced to return here for repairs. The other vessels con- tinued on their cruise. The Winifred, Blonde, Bolinder and Mary-Mar-Ann started on their homeward journey from Taku Inlet. They will go by easy stages visiting points of interest along thc route. The Snohomish sailed at 1 a.m. Sunday for Puget Sound. .- —— GETS SMALL FI Henry Sundali, arrested Sunday by Deputy Marshal Walter Sibley, pleaded guilty to violating the Al- aska Bone Dry Law in the United States Commissioner's Court here today, and was fined $25 and costs by Judge Frank A. Boyle. e ey FINED AT KETCHIKAN Bertha Whitman, arrested re- cently at Ketchikan on a liquor charge, was sentenced by Commis- sioner Arnold to pay a fine of $300 and sentenced to 60 days in the Federal jail there. e Mere man may swelter in the kind of ciothes he will wear this summer, but at least he won't have such a large part of him sunburned |outplayed in the field. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1929. popular throughout the Territory. He made many friends during his stay in Alaska. He was transfer- SERVICE TEAM BEATS LOCALS Navy and SnoHomish Beat Picked Team Saturday by Score of 8 to 7 A combined service team from the Navy Mappers and the Cutter Snohomish Saturday night defeated a pickup local team at City Park| The Princess Adelaide, Capt. C. by a score of 7 to 6. The local C. Sainty, arrived here from the outhit the Service outfit but were|SOuth Saturday evening at 8:30 |o'clock and left for Skagway and Haines at 11:30 pm. It where he is engaged as an engineer officer of the army, and where Capt. and Mrs. Fisher will be at home after August 15. ADELAIDE HERE SOUTHBOUND Cunningham held the sailors to| is due six hits in the seven frames while his team was hitting the sailor hurlers, Retan and Erickson for nine. But the sailors gave their| pitchers fine support, being charg- |00 the Princess Adelaide and the ed with but three bobbles Tm:rullawixm passengers for Juneau locals were charged with eight er-| A. P. King, Mildred Morrison, J rors, some of which were costly. |Peters, The Sailors scored first. Erickson | Shattuck. was safe on an error at short, went | S e e to third on a dropped fly in center | H. L. SYMONDS HERE but was nabbed at the plate. Hall went to second and Eaish to third Retan’s single scored both runners. Juneau scored four in their half of the second. B. Schmitz was safe on Retan's error. Kille- wich singled advancing Bill and both went up a notch on a wild pitch. J. Schmitz drew a pass. a.m. There were 98 round trip tourists H. L. Symonds, American Fisheries Company, ar- rived in Juneau on the Forester, Capt. Chris Anderson, Saturday | night, from the company’s cannery at Excursion Inlet, and sailed for| Petersburg on the Northwestern | this morning. He will return to| Capt. Fisher is well-known nnd[ red from Juneau to Fort Lawton,| TUESDAY MORNING here southbound tomorrow morning | at five o'clock and will sail at eight | Miss J. Peters, and Curtis | of the Pacific| Juneau again in about two weeks. e Kearney doubled and Nello singled to score four runners. | The Sailors added two more to| Two Swedish built automobiles| tie in the third. Hindle popped out soon will start on a trip around to first. Rand was safe on an (’r-ilhe world, expected to take two | ror at second, advanced when Paw- | years. likowski was hit by a pitched ball. |~ An error at short filled the bases.| Eaish hit to short forcing Rand| at the plate. Hall doubled scoring | Pawlikowski and Erickson. | Four more were chalked up by the Sailors in the fifth. Greber| was safe on an error at third. Hin- dle bunted safely after Greber stole second. Rand was safe on an er- ror at short, Greber scoring. After Pawlikowski whiffed, Erickson hit| a single scoring Hindle and Rand,| and himself scored on two succes- sive errors. 1 That was the end of the Sailor scoring. Juneau scored one in the fifth and two more in the seventh but lacked the punch to put ove: either the tying or winning run. e CAPT. FISHER TO WED MISS TRUAX JULY 2, SEATTLE| Several friends of Capt. Harry Earl Pisher, Engineers’ Corps, Unit- | ed States Army, for five years a member of the Alaska Board of| Road Commissioners, with his head- quarters and residence in Juneau“HILLS BROS have received invitations from Mr. ert ‘ COFFEE and Mrs. Arthur Robert Traux to| the marriage of their daughter, Miss Christine King Traux, to Capt. f;,';,’”v[",”;,:"' ";‘f Fisher. The wedding ceremony" En.\'l'lynnp;nrd with < key, ©1929 i « You car Broil @ Steak so every Bite | is De/z'};z'om, but what i it were a IDE You can control the cooking cult to do with a side of beef. Hills Bros. control the flavor of their coffee because they roast only a few pounds at a time by an exclusive, continu- ous process—never in bulk. will occur at the Mount Baker Park | Presbyterian Church, Seattle, Tues- | _ day evening, July 2, at 8 o'clock. wa“’”“; : 1 TOPKIS Athletic Disney Caps A complete assortment of well styled snappy as the ladies will. D e e e ] Madame Hetena Rubinstein, International Beauty Special- ist, says: “Remember that within you there is latent Beauty, new Youth, greater Loveliness. Let me help you.” Valaze Pasturized Face , Cream Valaze Cleansing Cream Valaze le Skin Food (embellisseur) Valaze Bleach Cream, Face Powder, Lip Sticks, Hair Tonics Sole Agents @ Phone 25 Free Delivery B o n A ] PSS Ansco Cameras and CAMERA SUPPLIES BUTLER-MAURO 3 DRUG CO. Free Delivery Phone 134 WHEN WE SELL IT IT'S RIGHT 7ree Delivery - Phone 33 Sub Station Post Office No. 1 UNION patternswfor summer E S U I TS Now on display 1 $1.00 i Lots of wear at a low price | H.S. GRAVES The Clothing Man SABIN & SCOTT The Store For Men e MacLaren’s Kraft Sharp Cheese, jar .._._45¢ MacLaren’s Kraft Limburger Cheese, jar.45¢ MacLaren’s Imperial Cheese, jar ... 75¢ MacLaren’s Imperial Cheese, jar ... $1.30 Holland Cheese Sticks ......................_ . 5¢ Holland Cheese Sticks . .......c........ $1.50 Gammelost, Genuine Ormond’s Cream Crackers Christie’s Cream Crackers ... a5k Purveyors to Particular People GEORGE BROTHERS Deliveries—10:30 a. m., 2:30 and 4:30 p. m. PHONES 92—95 Open Till 11 P, M. "Brrr of the steak—something diffi- | Positively No Credit Deliveries on Large Parcels No Approvals ONLY No Exchanges Store Hours No Refunds 9 am.--5 p.m Daily GRASP [T We wish to TELL YOU now' that our stock is still complete and urge you to visit our store EARLY and OFTEN so that you will be enabled to fully grasp this opportunity of buy- ing AT COST AND LESS while we can fully supply your EVERYTHING MUST GO FOR CASH TERMS CASH WE QUIT GOLDSTEIN EMPORIUM Store Open Till 9 Tonight — Come Early

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